Town Board votes for hamlet plan


AMENIA — It’s been more than a year since the town began discussion to choose a hamlet plan. The objective of the hamlet plan is to lay out how the town should develop, and to set out rules and regulations to facilitate that development.

Hamlet planner Harry Dodson presented the Town Board with four options for the hamlet plan months ago, after several meetings with town residents throughout last October. Subsequent revisions that were made after a presentation to the board in December.

"They’re all good plans with good points," Councilman Norman Cayea said last Thursday, Oct. 6, at the Town Board meeting.

"We’ve been sitting on this for awhile now," Town Supervisor Wayne Euvrard said. "I say we adopt a plan, give it a year to see how it plays out, and then we can tweak it if necessary."

Attorney to the Town Michael Hayes had drawn up a blank resolution that "endorses whatever plan you choose as a good illustration. It does not make whatever plan you choose tonight a binding document."

According to a past e-mail Dodson wrote to The Millerton News, "Option one focuses on redevelopment of the hamlet, with less development in outlying areas. Option four includes more development in outlying areas, but also includes hamlet redevelopment. Options two and three are in between. Option one is most in line with the town’s comprehensive plan and new zoning regulations."

"I think option three is midstream," Euvrard said. "Option one is too restrictive because it limits highway and commercial business in the town, which is the same reason why I voted against the comprehensive plan."

Councilman Joel Pelkey agreed.

"I’ve talked to a lot of people who want to see Amenia be more inviting to businesses," Pelkey said. "This is what they all want."

Councilwoman Vicki Doyle remained firm, as she has in the past, that option one is the most feasible plan because it complies with the town’s current zoning laws and its comprehensive plan.

"Each plan after the first one increasingly deviates from what [the laws and plans] currently allow and would have to involve SEQRA [State Environmental Quality Review Act] for adoption," she stated in a previous interview.

Cayea said that option three was the plan that best encompassed what the people of Amenia wanted.

Option three was passed by a vote of three to one, with Doyle voting for option one and Councilwoman Victoria Perotti abstaining.

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